In Wake of Devastating 2015 Fish Kills, EPA Can No Longer Sweep Problem with Dams, Climate Change under the Rug

August 15, 2016 (Boise, ID; Portland OR; and Seattle, WA) — In response to rising water temperatures and inaction by federal agencies, Pacific Northwest groups are filing to sue the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to take action and prevent massive, heat-driven fish kills.

“We need a comprehensive plan to deal with dams’ impacts on water temperature, or we may be telling our kids stories about salmon instead of teaching them to fish,” said Miles Johnson, attorney for Columbia Riverkeeper.

Last year scientists recorded the warmest year on record, and hot water killed 250,000 adult sockeye salmon in the Columbia and Snake rivers. The groups, including Columbia Riverkeeper, Snake River Waterkeeper, Idaho Rivers United, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Association and the Institute for Fisheries Resources, said that can’t happen again.

They will file a notice of intent to sue the EPA today (Monday, Aug. 15, 2016). If the agency does not finalize a pollution budget—called a Total Maximum Daily Load­ under the Clean Water Act­—within 60 days or agree to a settlement, the groups will seek a court order compelling the agency to issue the pollution budget in order to protect salmon from hot water.

In 2003, EPA was nearing completion of a plan when dam operators pressured EPA to abandon the effort.

“Our members’ livelihoods depend on healthy salmon runs,” said Glen Spain, northwest regional director of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations and the Institute for Fisheries Resources. “It’s simply unacceptable to let hot water kill otherwise-healthy adult salmon before they can spawn.”

BACKGROUND
Washington, Oregon, and Idaho list the Columbia and Snake rivers as too hot to protect salmon. In 2000, at the request of Washington and Oregon, EPA agreed to develop a legally enforceable plan—called a Total Maximum Daily Load or pollution budget—to address the problem. In 2003, EPA conducted a study to understand the causes of hot water in the Columbia and Snake rivers and began developing the pollution budget. But dam operators objected and EPA shelved the plan. Why? EPA found that dams are the main cause of temperature problems.
WHAT IS THE LAW?The Clean Water Act sets a ceiling for how high river temperatures can reach before states, or EPA, must step in and develop a pollution budget. The Endangered Species Act protects critically imperiled species from extinction. But the government agencies in charge of the Columbia and Snake dam system aren’t obeying the law. In late July 2015, the Columbia’s temperature at Bonneville Dam exceeded 72°F—well above 68°F EPA set as the maximum temperature to prevent lethal impacts to salmon. According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, this is the third summer in a row where water temperatures in the Columbia and Snake are higher than ever recorded.

Fishermen and river users weren’t the only ones who saw the problem:

EPA: “the need to lower water temperatures becomes more critical as the Pacific Northwest Region continues to address…climate change.”[1]

National Marine Fisheries Service and the Army Corps proposed a few measures to address the problems seen in 2015, but EPA criticized those proposals as “limited to micro-scale temperature improvements at specific dams.”[2]

The Fish Passage Center, an independent federal research group, said that those proposals “obscure[ed] the primary lesson from the 2015 experience, which is that under a climate change scenario, the long-recognized and largely unaddressed problem of high water temperatures in the [Columbia and Snake rivers] becomes an ever-increasing threat to the survival of salmon.”[3]

Footage of Sockeye Salmon from Draino Lake July 2015 via USGS:

On Aug. 24, 2016, Riverkeeper hosted an informative talk: “Hot Water, Fish Kills, & the Future of Salmon”at Slopeswell Cider in Hood River as a part of the organization’s “Love Your Columbia Event Series.”

In May 2017, Hanford made national news when a tunnel containing highly radioactive waste partially collapsed, triggering a shelter-in-place order for nearby workers and prompting widespread concerns about Hanford’s aging nuclear infrastructure. The U.S. Department of Energy (Energy) filled the tunnel with grout, a form of cement. Now, Energy seeks to fill a second, larger tunnel with grout. if left in place, the pollution in the tunnels—known as the PUREX tunnels—could pose long-term risks to soils, groundwater, and the Columbia River.

PGE wants to increase smog-forming pollution at its Carty Generating Station, a 450 MW fracked gas-fired power plant. The plant began operating in 2016. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality’s (DEQ) new draft air pollution permit would allow the Carty Generating Station to emit 800% more volatile organic compounds, a key component of low-level ozone (smog) formation. Join Riverkeeper urging DEQ to hold PGE to its current pollution limits, and not to open the door to more pollution from PGE’s new fracked gas power plant. ACT NOW!